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Putting the pressure on employees to return to the office could cost financial companies their leadership.
August 8 -
A federal judge's decision to bar the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau from enforcing a small business data collection rule pending the outcome of a Supreme Court case could give banks an opening to block a pending $8 late fee rule as well.
August 7 -
Texas State Bankshares has agreed to buy Estrada Hinojosa & Co., one of the nation's biggest municipal underwriting and advisory firms.
August 7 -
Activity in the primary market kicked off with a number of banks announcing debt deals overnight, including BNP Paribas, which became the first European bank to sell additional tier 1 notes in U.S. dollars since the writedown of Credit Suisse securities.
August 7 -
Ybarra, who leads the megabank's sprawling institutional clients group, plans to depart in the first half of next year. Citi says it's assessing how to allocate his responsibilities.
August 7 -
The payment company's sizable audience and existing technology differentiate it in a market that is otherwise dominated by startups.
August 7 -
The Vancouver, Washington, company disclosed in a regulatory filing that Kevin Lycklama was under investigation. It elaborated only to say that the matter did not involve the bank's financial condition.
August 7 -
Deployments picked up speed during the pandemic, and have continued into this year as commuter networks try to win back riders.
August 7 -
India's Unified Payments Interface has been an extraordinary success. The Fed should take careful note of how the system came to dominate the Indian economy.
August 7
E6 -
Much of the industry is slimming down, with some banks calling it quits on riskier sectors and selling loans they no longer want. The trend is particularly prominent at regional banks that are preparing to comply with new capital rules.
August 6














